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Sugar free spirit

  • 24 Apr 2012 3:31 AM
    Message # 900136
    Deleted user

    Hi there

    I just joined this website tonight. I live in New Zealand. I have been addicted to sugar for years. It has been my entertainment, my comfort, my energy source. You name it!

    I woke up one night 5 weeks ago after a binge on pizza chips cake and lollies and I  was on fire in my chest. It was like paint stripper burning it's way up my chest, my throat and into my ears. It was horrifying. You might say heartburn. Well......... I've been taking omaprezole for years two a day so you'd think I wouldn't experience anything like that. Anyhow it lasted for over an hour and as I sat in the dark drinking my 6th full glass of water and bicarbonate and soda, freaking out I had a really clear thought and it said, "You are going to die if you don't do something about your eating", and I believed it.

    I have been overweight for years and I have felt ill for years. The day after my burning wake up call I stopped the lollies, biscuits, cake etc. I haven't had any since. 5 weeks now. Strangely  enought I just knew the sugar had to go. THe other odd thing was that someone happened to tell me about the book sweet poison shortly after I stopped. I read it and that was it. I bought the quit plan and now I'm determined to become the free spirit I used to be before I turned my body into a toxic wasteland.

    I am still feeling very tired without the sugar and I've had all sorts of shakes, sweats headaches and weakness. This is the first day I haven't felt so completely fatigued though i am still weary but i am not as hungry and I don't miss the sugar.

    I got through Easter without an easter egg!

    I know i haven't wiped out all fructose yet so that's why I'm here so I can learn.

    Cheers from Gwendoline


     

  • 25 Apr 2012 1:39 AM
    Reply # 901063 on 900136
    Deleted user
    Hi Gwendoline...good luck! I have been trying for a few weeks now but I just seem to have a good run and then there is a function or outing or an event that involves "sugar" and I take 2 steps backwards again. I also work away from home and my meals are provided and I am finding this difficult but am still trying. I have not lost any weight and I think in the back of our minds we think that it will just fall off without the sugar...not so I am afraid....although for some it does.
    Anyhow I feel healthier but very, very tired so I will just keep trying.
    Cheers Carolyn
  • 25 Apr 2012 4:52 AM
    Reply # 901194 on 900136
    Deleted user

    Hi Carol

    I've been lucky that I got so scared by that health scare that I wont go near sugar.

    I have lost 1 kilo. I think it is because I just don't have the appetite I had before. My friend is also giving up poison and she is finding it hard.

    I have to change a lot of the stuff I'm eating too. So I'm not really doing it thoroughly yet.

    I am still tired but today I felt a bit better. It feels like I'm coming alive again and my thinking is a lot clearer and more steady.

    Hang in there. I think this is a great place to get support and I really appreciate you writing back to me

    Kind regards Gwendoline

     

     

  • 26 Apr 2012 2:31 AM
    Reply # 902485 on 900136
    Anonymous
    This a repeat from yesterday to Dee somebody. I've highlighted the sections I think are relevant to you ladies. Don't "give up" sugar - just "quit" - change your lifestyle*. If after your appetite-control system is back in working order ( a few weeks sugar free) you are still craving sweet stuff then it may be for emotional reasons - "comfort food". You may need to talk to a counsellor about that to resolve whatever the emotional issues are.

    You can also avoid those social occasions where you are tempted, for a few weeks. Or ask them to your place and serve sugar-free food. . .  BE CREATIVE!
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Good on you Dee. Is SP the only book of David's you have bought?  If so, I seriously suggest  buying SP-Quit Plan. It is loaded with lots of great "how to" recommendations. It includes lists of 10-best & 10-worst in many food categories, as well useful lists of the various types of sugars, which helps you make sense of the NIPs (nutritional information panels) of foods in the supermarket. These are worth copying and carrying with you when shopping.

    *Some of your comments seem to imply that you are "giving up" eating sugary stuff. As with quitting smoking, this is the top of the slippery slope. Don't "give up" anything - just think of the positive outcomes your "new way of life" will bring you. And if you do get cravings, the best way of dealing with them is to distract yourself - they'll go away in a few minutes.

    The SPQP has lots of snack ideas, nuts being a popular one. A small piece of fruit is another - but no more than two a day. I have Cruskits with cream cheese and Vegemite for morning tea and an Arnott's Lattice  biscuit (11% sugar) in the afternoon. When out shopping etc I have plain toast with Vegemite with my coffee. Sometimes a plain scone - I don't think they have much sugar in them. For pre-dinner nibbles with a glass of wine I have potato chips (check the sugar and polyunsaturated fat content) or Snax (ditto).  You, or the cook, can also make up the sort of snack biscuits with toppings you get served at afternoon teas etc. Use low-sugar bix.

    In David's books, and on this web site, there are many delicious ecipies which do not include fructose. And you can often just substitute x cups of cane sugar with 2x cups of glucose. You can buy it in the home-brew section of the supermarket.

    Another piece of "advice" . . . get to love vegies! They are very low in sugar and many make nice snacks, like carrots, celery sticks and ?

    FYI I'm 80yo, 185cm tall, 78kg & 96cm waist. I'd like to get that down to 94cm, as all men should to avoid a build-up of fat around the vital organs [80cm for women].

    When attending dinner etc parties remember "party food is for parties" - you can have a little pig-out [piglet out?] but don't get carried away!  And, like over imbibing wine, you can go extra easy the next day on sweet stuff. 

    JohnN
    Last modified: 26 Apr 2012 2:32 AM | Anonymous
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